4.5 Article

Current State of Pediatric Cardio-Oncology: A Review

Journal

CHILDREN-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/children9020127

Keywords

cancer; cardio-oncology; cardiovascular; oncology; pediatric

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The landscape of pediatric oncology has changed significantly, with improved survival rates due to advancements in chemotherapy and development of novel therapies. However, many targeted treatments can lead to cardiovascular pathologies. Data on prevention and treatment strategies for pediatric cardiac diseases are lacking, leading to practice variability. Future research should focus on prevention strategies, management of cardiovascular risk factors, risk prediction, early detection, and understanding the role of genetic susceptibility. Collaboration between pediatric cardiologists and oncologists is crucial for better understanding and preventing cardiac diseases in pediatric oncology patients.
The landscape of pediatric oncology has dramatically changed over the course of the past several decades with five-year survival rates surpassing 80%. Anthracycline therapy has been the cornerstone of many chemotherapy regimens for pediatric patients since its introduction in the 1960s, and recent improved survival has been in large part due to advancements in chemotherapy, refinement of supportive care treatments, and development of novel therapeutics such as small molecule inhibitors, chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, and immune checkpoint inhibitors. Unfortunately, many cancer-targeted therapies can lead to acute and chronic cardiovascular pathologies. The range of cardiotoxicity can vary but includes symptomatic or asymptotic heart failure, arrhythmias, coronary artery disease, valvar disease, pericardial disease, hypertension, and peripheral vascular disease. There is lack of data guiding primary prevention and treatment strategies in the pediatric population, which leads to substantial practice variability. Several important future research directions have been identified, including as they relate to cardiac disease, prevention strategies, management of cardiovascular risk factors, risk prediction, early detection, and the role of genetic susceptibility in development of cardiotoxicity. Continued collaborative research will be key in advancing the field. The ideal model for pediatric cardio-oncology is a proactive partnership between pediatric cardiologists and oncologists in order to better understand, treat, and ideally prevent cardiac disease in pediatric oncology patients.

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